Than you, Sue.
Good luck, everyone. I'm very glad we all have this channel to reach out to one another.
~cyclista Nicholas
On 2020-03-13 22:42, Sue Prant wrote:
We have 28 employees. 6 are salary. 2 are contractors. Some work very few hours. Probably about 8 work only a few hours a week. There are 3 full time paid hourly and then a bunch from 10 - 20 (hourly paid) hours a week. With schools closed, we have a few dad's who would have needed to take PTO anyway. I'll let you know what we figure out in our financial analysis. I will say our Financial Director (who does all the insurance, payroll, bookkeeping, etc) has no shortage of work right now.
Sue Prant Community Cycles Boulder, CO
Sent from my phone.
On Fri, Mar 13, 2020, 4:33 PM Cyclista Nicholas cyclista@inventati.org wrote:
Sue,
We're probably going to need to do that as well. Please keep the list updated with anything you come up with? Also how many employees you have responsibility for would be interesting in that context.
Thanks!!
~cyclista Nicholas
On 2020-03-13 22:03, Sue Prant wrote:
At this point we are asking hourly folks to use PTO. Thanks to someone else's suggestion, we do have a few people building bikes at home. Salary staff is mostly admin & we are going to do all the things we never get to - update web site, writing enough blog posts to last a while, retooling reports, etc. We are running financial models on what we could pay people if this extends into April.
Sue Prant Community Cycles Boulder, CO
Sent from my phone.
On Fri, Mar 13, 2020, 3:57 PM Cyclista Nicholas cyclista@inventati.org wrote:
Bob,
Thanks for this important point. At our shop, we've had almost a thousand individual participants come through in the last three years. If we did our job, that many people out there in the community should be able to influence repair capability citywide, even without access to the shop.
All,
We're still evaluating our response, but I agree it's pragmatic to take extreme measures earlier, if for no other reason than to spread out (ease) the burden on essential medical systems.
How are shops with employees paid hourly dealing with the notion of closing? Will employees stil be paid in some fashion, or are they essentially being laid off in the case of closures?
~cyclista Nicholas (Director, Recycle Ithaca's Bicycles)
On 2020-03-13 18:38, Bob Giordano wrote:
Just a quick thought on 'essential services':
I think that community bicycle shops are essential for healthy, vibrant, socially just communities, in today's 'modern' age.... especially as a long term strategy to improve our cooperative systems.
Community bicycle shops are likely not essential as far as absolute survival and in the context of remaining open during this pandemic.
Hopefully we've all done enough community work to help people learn skills to work together and fix things, with our without a dedicated space.
Just wanted to put this thought out there, as many shops are deciding how to move forward.
Thanks, Bob Giordano, Free Cycles Missoula
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